SensoryEdge Kids Furniture and Educational Toys Blog


Thursday, November 12, 2009

Pretend Play in the Classroom


Pretend play brings out the creativity in children while encouraging them to invent their own ideas and learning cooperative play. Teachers love to see their students engaging in this kind of play because it makes the day go smoother. Having the right items in your school room encourage dramatic play at school. This hub will review some items that will help you enjoy each day as an educator.

Toy Link: Standard Unit Blocks

The possibilities with blocks when it comes to pretend play are endless. One of the most insightful activities a teacher can do with blocks is to dump out some blocks in front of each student and let them decide what to build. Some students will build towers, other students will build pens for their animals, some will build car ramps, and others will build their own unique designs.

Having wooden blocks in the classroom gives teachers many options to engage students in pretend play. Learning about space can result in the building of rockets. Learning letters can result in students "building" their name. Blocks also give students a great way to pretend play together. Learning to share and build on another students idea are lessons that will continue all throughout the education process.

Toy Link: Classroom Rugs

The following comments are from teachers and explain how classroom rugs help them and their students:

We spend most of our day sitting on the carpet for lessons, calendar, morning meeting, and music

Kids learn best with hands and feet on activities

We like to it upon the rug for lessons, to talk about our feelings, to play games, to listen to stories, and to sing songs. This meeting space brings us all together, and fuels our sense of community

Having a nice, clean, spacious, rug fills us with pride in our learning environment. The children sit on a rug in front of the white board to practice phonics, block and center time and story time

A classroom rug adds an attractive, inviting area for the children to sit and read books when they have completed desk assignments. It also provides a place to gather for interactive hands on Science activities

These little energetic bodies need their space defined on the rug. They are learning to be good listeners and respect the personal space of their peers. A rug with defined lines will help us accomplish this goal

Rug time helps us transition from one activity to the next. We spend a lot of time on the rug singing, reading and listening to stories

The bigger size of this rug helps students sit on the floor without disrupting one another and it also provide them with educational experiences.

They love to lay on the reading rug in our classroom library and relax and read. We usually do story time and class discussions on the reading rug. We spend a lot of our class time on the reading rug

A rug allows my students their own personal and easily identifiable space during group gathering time. It will also assist in organizing students into cooperative learning groups. The rug will come to life in our classroom and enhance our learning atmosphere

A welcoming rug enhances their love for reading and writing. A rug will be the focal point of the classroom

Toy Link: Wooden Book Displays

Having book displays in the classroom give students the perfect setting to play library or book store. This kind of play will encourage students to read and become interested in books. Students can take turns being the librarian or cashier and describe the books to the other students.

Encourage pretend play in students as part of your lesson plans. Learn the personality of each student and you'll be surprised at their imaginations and ability to see the world in a different light.
Create a mail person of the day game. Get index cards and have the children label each card with the books in the class. Take them to the schools library and let them get an idea how the school library system works, them emulate that in your class. Pretend play with a lesson!

Toy Link: School Tables and Chairs

The simple set up of a table and chairs within the classroom can give kids a place to pretend. Students can pretend they are at the dinner table while they serve and eat pretend food. This gives students a relaxed setting to act like a family and take turns doing different jobs.

Students may also arrange the table and chairs in a way that represents the classroom, pretending to be teacher and students. For a teacher, it is exciting to see students play school. It gives insight into what they are learning and what type of teaching they mimic. Teachers can observe and get some understanding into what parts of the day and what types of lessons kids enjoy. They will pick their favorite things to act out.

A table and chairs is also a good setting for pretend office play. Maybe students have seen their parents work at an office, have visited the school office, or watched the teacher work at her desk. For teachers, this type of play is a good way to see which students take the leadership roles and which students take other roles.

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Thursday, October 22, 2009

Classroom Storage: Making Learning Fun


An organized classroom is a fun and efficient classroom. To maximize daily schedules, teachers need to organize their materials for easier reference so they can separate materials they use everyday from materials periodically. Storage can be exciting. Classroom storage can be a fun way to learn because you can use book displays as libraries and cubbies as mail boxes. Assign students jobs and they naturally become interested in the subject.

You can have a cubby assigned to each student so they can have a place to keep their art supplies, assignments, & books. Teachers can also use the cubbies to give the students projects, leave notes or give home work.

Its also a fun way for students to learn responsibility in the classroom and for them to get to know their classmates names. Many cubbies, such as the 10 Tray Mobile Storage Unit, come with removable plastic drawers.

For students who are still learning to read, each plastic draw can be labeled with a picture of the item that is inside. Students will love being called on to retrieve an item for the teacher or a classmate. Books that are displayed in an orderly and eye catching fashion will not only help the classroom look organized but it will also encourage the students to read. Books are part of the classroom, its common for classrooms to have lot of books for quiet reading or book reports. If you arrange the books in an orderly fashion this will encourage the students to check them out.

Cubbies can help teachers showcase books and display books in a manner that will interest the students. The best way to display the books is to place them in an angle that will show the front cover instead of putting them in a line showing just the spines. Students have materials that they need to carry around, portable storage is just the thing for this. Retrievable storage cubbies such as the See, Store and Take-Along Storage Cart, is equipped with lids that have handles. You will find that students like carrying them around and take pride in it.

Organizing the classroom using cubbies is fun and easy, it can also be an activity to keep them busy while the teacher is involved with other projects. Also, for super safe storage solutions make sure to check out the tip me not line of school furniture from Wood Designs.

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Thursday, September 03, 2009

Recognizing the Value of Quality Products in the Classroom Part 2


Preschools within the program's reach are also set to take advantage of the extra money, by adding more exploratory toys and learning devices to their programs in combination with the new furnishings and storage units. Specialized tables, chairs, book displays, and lockers may also be purchased to meet the needs of smaller children.
Because preschoolers through kindergartners are still developing fine motor skills, hand-eye coordination and speaking skills; providing them with additional chances for imaginative play and exploration is high important to encourage proper development. These toys can include classic toys like blocks and art projects, as well as more advance and larger scale items.

Tables and Craft Centers


Because art, like drawing and finger painting, is so important for a very child’s development; teachers will likely spend more funds buying desks, tables, and easels to support their student's artistic expression and abilities. Tables with built in storage compartments add more benefits because supplies like paper, paints, and crayons can be kept within arm's reach when art class rolls around.

Play Centers

Quality play stations can range in size and theme, but they all have one important thing in common: kids love them! From play kitchens with sinks, stoves, and appliances right within reach to larger scale indoor playgrounds: these centers are important parts of any preschooler’s world.

Mainstream offers a wide variety of play centers, many with slides and climbing centers built in. This not only gives kids a stimulating place to play but also helps to encourage muscle tone and development and motor skills and balance. Some of these playgrounds can also be used by children as young as six months, helping them to increase leg development to encourage standing and walking.

Book Storage

Very young children are often rougher with materials than older ones. Papers, drawings, and books tend to get crumbled and stained when not properly put away. For that reason, most preschool classrooms should be properly outfitted with quality book storage units.

The perfect storage unit for this age group is something easy to reach and easy to see the covers of each book so kids can pick their favorite stories with no assistance. Although easy to access, having a designated place to keep books and other reading materials is beneficial by keeping them off the floor and out of desks when not in use. This method will also help teachers better keep track of each book, so they are less likely to get lost or damaged.

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